The World Next Week podcast is up. Stewart Patrick filled in for Bob McMahon. Stewart and I talked about the famine in the horn of Africa; a possible endgame in Libya; the UN Security Council’s discussion of its peacekeeping operations; and developments in the Republican nominating race.

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The highlights:

International efforts to combat famine in Somalia have stumbled over several obstacles: failures to coordinate the efforts of governments, international organizations, and private charities; the opposition of some al-Shabaab leaders to aid efforts; and the theft of some of food shipments.

The six-month-old Libyan civil war looks to be entering into its final phase. Rebels claim to have captured Zawiya, a city of 200,000 people located thirty miles west of Tripoli. If true, the rebels can cut off food and fuel supplies to the Libyan capital. If Qaddafi’s forces stand their ground and fight, the result could be exactly what the West sought to avoid with its military intervention—a humanitarian disaster. The difference is that the victims will be the residents of Tripoli rather than Benghazi.

The United Nations has 120,000 people in fifteen countries participating in peacekeeping operations. Those commitments have stretched the UN’s peacekeeping capacity, intensifying the pressure to find ways to operate more efficiently. The pressures on UN peacekeeping are likely to grow if House Republicans get their way. They propose making deep cuts in U.S. financial contributions to UN peacekeeping.

Tim Pawlenty left the GOP presidential race just as Rick Perry joined it. Perry’s entry doesn’t immediately change the foreign policy dynamic in the race. Pawlenty had positioned himself as the “hawk internationalist,” and Perry looks to be staking out the same terrain. American voters, including many Republicans, however, look to be losing faith in hawkish internationalism, at least when it comes to Afghanistan.

Stewart’s Figure of the Week is Larysa Kondracki. My Figure of the Week is 58,000. Listen to the podcast to find out why.

Jagdish, a thirty-two-year-old daily wage laborer, smokes a cigarette while working at a timber market in Mumbai on June 7, 2011. (Danish Siddiqui/courtesy Reuters)

President Obama’s decision to pursue the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade talks has created a political problem for the White House. The tobacco industry wants the administration to push Asian countries to open up their markets to its products. Public health advocates note that the White House has endorsed next month’s United Nations summit on non-communicable diseases and are calling on the administration to discourage tobacco use abroad as well as at home.Thomas J. Bollyky, CFR’s new senior fellow for global health, economics, and development, just completed a CFR Policy Innovation Memorandum entitled Forging a New Trade Policy on Tobacco. I asked Tom to explain what’s at stake in the debate and how the White House might reconcile trade imperatives with global public health goals. Here is what he had to say.

Tobacco is reemerging as a polarizing issue in U.S. trade policy. Last month, Representative Linda Sanchez (D-CA) circulated a letter demanding that the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) exclude tobacco entirely from its eight-country Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade talks. Philip Morris asked USTR to use these TPP talks to eliminate tobacco tariffs and block the use of large health warning labels on cigarette packs. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has joined in, supporting the tobacco industry’s efforts on labeling.

It is unclear how U.S. officials will proceed, but the stakes are high. The position that the White House adopts on tobacco will set the precedent for future U.S. trade agreements.

Vice President Joe Biden waves before boarding a plane at Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv on March 11, 2010. (Ronen Zvulun/courtesy Reuters)

The World Next Week podcast is up. Bob McMahon and I discussed Vice President Joe Biden’s upcoming visit to Asia; the resumption of the trial of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak; this weekend’s Straw Poll in Ames, Iowa; and Germany’s observance of the upcoming fiftieth anniversary of the construction of the Berlin Wall.

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